- Mahmoud Abbas has also described the conflict as ‘beyond a catastrophe’
Palestine’s president says that Gaza is unrecognisable due to the damage sustained during the Israeli offensive and has blamed the US for prolonging the war.
The assault has seen at least 241 people killed over the last 24 hours, as the war rages into its third month.
Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas described the Gaza Strip conflict as ‘beyond a war of annihilation’, adding that it was unprecedented in the history of the Palestinian people.
Israel’s army chief Herzi Halevi said the war would continue for ‘many more months’ so that Israel’s ‘achievements are preserved for a long time’.
On an Egyptian TV channel in his first interview since the start of the war, Abbas said that the West Bank could cave in at any time.
He accused Washington of lengthening the war by vetoing UN draft resolutions aimed at securing a ceasefire.
Abbas has called the war a ‘grave crime’ against his people.
Israel says it struck more than 100 sites yesterday, amid reports of imminent ground operations in central Gaza.
Loud blasts could be heard from the Gaza Strip across the perimeter with Israel in the early hours of Wednesday.
Six Palestinians died in an overnight Israeli drone strike in the Nur Shams refugee camp in Tulkarem in the West Bank, Palestinian medical sources said.
Gaza’s health ministry said 382 people had sustained injuries over the same 24-hour period.
Footage released from Gaza City yesterday appears to show IDF soldiers rounding up men stripped down to their underwear.
The video shows several men standing in the middle of a stadium in front of armed soldiers.
Several men are later shown sitting on the grass with their hands behind their backs as others are lined up with their hands raised in front of troops.
More than 20,900 Palestinians, two-thirds of them women and children, have been killed since the start of the war, according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, which doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants among the dead.
About 1,200 people were killed after Hamas raided southern Israel on October 7, with around 240 people taken hostage. Israel says it aims to free the more than 100 hostages who remain in captivity in Gaza.
Lieutenant General Halevi, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), told a news conference: ‘There are no shortcuts when it comes to thoroughly dismantling a terrorist organisation except being stubborn and determined in the fighting.’
‘There are no magic solutions,’ he added.
He promised to arrest or eliminate the Hamas leadership even if it would take time to do so.
Halevi also noted that the IDF is close to taking apart all of the Hamas battalions in northern Gaza.
Israeli and Arab media say that Egypt has put forward a ceasefire plan.
This would see the phased release of all Israeli hostages and an undetermined number of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, culminating in the suspension of Israel’s offensive, according to reports.
Dozens of hostages were released from Gaza in exchange for Palestinian prisoners in a previous temporary truce deal negotiated by Qatar.
But so far both sides have defied calls for a lasting ceasefire.